Template:Clarify

From Lojban
Revision as of 08:37, 28 December 2013 by Gleki (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<chapter xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xml:id="chapter-about"> ==Lojban As We Mangle It In Lojbanistan: About This Book== <mediaobject xml:id="chapter-about-pictu...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

<chapter xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xml:id="chapter-about">

Lojban As We Mangle It In Lojbanistan: About This Book

<mediaobject xml:id="chapter-about-picture"> <alt>The picture for chapter 1</alt> <imageobject> <imagedata fileref="media/chapter-about.gif" /> </imageobject> </mediaobject>

What is Lojban?

<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Logical Language Group</primary><secondary>relation to Lojban</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Lojban</primary><secondary>history of</secondary></indexterm> Lojban (pronounced LOZH-bahn) is a constructed language. Previous versions of the language were called Loglan by Dr. James Cooke Brown, who founded the Loglan Project and started the development of the language in 1955. The goals for the language were first described in the open literature in the article


<citetitle pubwork="article">Loglan</citetitle>, published in <citetitle pubwork="journal">Scientific American</citetitle>, June, 1960. Made well-known by that article and by occasional references in science fiction (most notably in Robert Heinlein's novel

<citetitle pubwork="book">The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress</citetitle>) and computer publications, Loglan and Lojban have been built over four decades by dozens of workers and hundreds of supporters, led since 1987 by The Logical Language Group (who are the publishers of this book).


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Lojban</primary><secondary>features of</secondary></indexterm> There are thousands of artificial languages (of which Esperanto is the best-known), but Loglan/Lojban has been engineered to make it unique in several ways. The following are the main features of Lojban:

  • Lojban is designed to be used by people in communication with each other, and possibly in the future with computers.
  • Lojban is designed to be neutral between cultures.
  • Lojban grammar is based on the principles of predicate logic.
  • Lojban has an unambiguous yet flexible grammar.
  • Lojban has phonetic spelling, and unambiguously resolves its sounds into words.
  • Lojban is simple compared to natural languages; it is easy to learn.
  • Lojban's 1300 root words can be easily combined to form a vocabulary of millions of words.
  • Lojban is regular; the rules of the language are without exceptions.
  • Lojban attempts to remove restrictions on creative and clear thought and communication.
  • Lojban has a variety of uses, ranging from the creative to the scientific, from the theoretical to the practical.
  • Lojban has been demonstrated in translation and in original works of prose and poetry.



What is this book?

<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>goal of this book</primary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>goal of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>reference grammar</primary></indexterm> This book is what is called a reference grammar. It attempts to expound the whole Lojban language, or at least as much of it as is understood at present. Lojban is a rich language with many features, and an attempt has been made to discover the functions of those features. The word

discover is used advisedly; Lojban was not invented by any one person or committee. Often, grammatical features were introduced into the language long before their usage was fully understood. Sometimes they were introduced for one reason, only to prove more useful for other reasons not recognized at the time.


By intention, this book is complete in description but not in explanation. For every rule in the formal Lojban grammar (given in <xref linkend="chapter-grammars"/>), there is a bit of explanation and an example somewhere in the book, and often a great deal more than a bit. In essence, <xref linkend="chapter-tour"/> gives a brief overview of the language, <xref linkend="chapter-grammars"/> gives the formal structure of the language, and the chapters in between put semantic flesh on those formal bones. I hope that eventually more grammatical material founded on (or even correcting) the explanations in this book will become available.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>linguistic drift</primary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Lojban</primary><secondary>stability of</secondary></indexterm> Nevertheless, the publication of this book is, in one sense, the completion of a long period of language evolution. With the exception of a possible revision of the language that will not even be considered until five years from publication date, and any revisions of this book needed to correct outright errors, the language described in this book will not be changing by deliberate act of its creators any more. Instead, language change will take place in the form of new vocabulary – Lojban does not yet have nearly the vocabulary it needs to be a fully usable language of the modern world, as <xref linkend="chapter-lujvo"/> explains – and through the irregular natural processes of drift and (who knows?) native-speaker evolution. (Teach your children Lojban!) You can learn the language described here with assurance that (unlike previous versions of Lojban and Loglan, as well as most other artificial languages) it will not be subject to further fiddling by language-meisters.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>structure of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>structure of this book</primary></indexterm> It is probably worth mentioning that this book was written somewhat piecemeal. Each chapter began life as an explication of a specific Lojban topic; only later did these begin to clump together into a larger structure of words and ideas. Therefore, there are perhaps not as many cross-references as there should be. However, I have attempted to make the index as comprehensive as possible.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>chapter titles</primary><secondary>intent of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>jokes</primary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Lojbanistan</primary></indexterm> Each chapter has a descriptive title, often involving some play on words; this is an attempt to make the chapters more memorable. The title of <xref linkend="chapter-about"/> (which you are now reading), for example, is an allusion to the book <citetitle pubwork="book">English As We Speak It In Ireland</citetitle>, by P. W. Joyce, which is a sort of informal reference grammar of Hiberno-English.

Lojbanistan is both an imaginary country where Lojban is the native language, and a term for the actual community of Lojban-speakers, scattered over the world. Why

mangle? As yet, nobody in the real Lojbanistan speaks the language at all well, by the standards of the imaginary Lojbanistan; that is one of the circumstances this book is meant to help remedy.


What are the typographical conventions of this book?

Each chapter is broken into numbered sections; each section contains a mixture of expository text, numbered examples, and possibly tables.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>examples of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>examples in this book</primary></indexterm> The reader will notice a certain similarity in the examples used throughout the book. One chapter after another rings the changes on the self-same sentences:


==


<indexterm type="example"><primary>go to the store</primary><secondary>example</secondary></indexterm>


<anchor xml:id="c1e3d1"/> == <interlinear-gloss> 'mi klama le zarci' <gloss>I go-to that-which-I-describe-as-a store.</gloss> 'I go to the store.' </interlinear-gloss>

 will become wearisomely familiar before 

<xref linkend="chapter-grammars"/> is reached. This method is deliberate; I have tried to use simple and (eventually) familiar examples wherever possible, to avoid obscuring new grammatical points with new vocabulary. Of course, this is not the method of a textbook, but this book is not a textbook (although people have learned Lojban from it and its predecessors). Rather, it is intended both for self-learning (of course, at present would-be Lojban teachers must be self-learners) and to serve as a reference in the usual sense, for looking up obscure points about the language.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>examples</primary><secondary>structure of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>structure of examples</primary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>example of examples</primary></indexterm> It is useful to talk further about <xref linkend="example-random-id-hrtj"/> for what it illustrates about examples in this book. Examples usually occupy three lines. The first of these is in Lojban, the second in a word-by-word literal translation of the Lojban into English, and the third in colloquial English. The second and third lines are sometimes called the

literal translation and the colloquial translation respectively. Sometimes, when clarity is not sacrificed thereby, one or both are omitted. If there is more than one Lojban sentence, it generally means that they have the same meaning.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>square brackets</primary><secondary>use of in notation</secondary></indexterm> Words are sometimes surrounded by square brackets. In Lojban texts, these enclose optional grammatical particles that may (in the context of the particular example) be either omitted or included. In literal translations, they enclose words that are used as conventional translations of specific Lojban words, but don't have exactly the meanings or uses that the English word would suggest. In

<xref linkend="chapter-phonology"/>, square brackets surround phonetic representations in the International Phonetic Alphabet.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>grammatical categories</primary><secondary>use of upper case for</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>tables</primary><secondary>format of</secondary></indexterm> Many of the tables, especially those placed at the head of various sections, are in three columns. The first column contains Lojban words discussed in that section; the second column contains the grammatical category (represented by an UPPER CASE Lojban word) to which the word belongs, and the third column contains a brief English gloss, not necessarily or typically a full explanation. Other tables are explained in context.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>technical terms</primary></indexterm> A few Lojban words are used in this book as technical terms. All of these are explained in

<xref linkend="chapter-tour"/>, except for a few used only in single chapters, which are explained in the introductory sections of those chapters.


Disclaimers

<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>disclaimers</primary></indexterm> It is necessary to add, alas, that the examples used in this book do not refer to any existing person, place, or institution, and that any such resemblance is entirely coincidental and unintentional, and not intended to give offense.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>dictionary</primary><secondary>superior authority of</secondary></indexterm> When definitions and place structures of gismu, and especially of lujvo, are given in this book, they may differ from those given in the English-Lojban dictionary (which, as of this writing, is not yet published). If so, the information given in the dictionary supersedes whatever is given here.


Acknowledgements and Credits

<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>LLG</primary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>author of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>author of this book</primary></indexterm> Although the bulk of this book was written for the Logical Language Group (LLG) by John Cowan, who is represented by the occasional authorial

I, certain chapters were first written by others and then heavily edited by me to fit into this book.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>contributors to</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>contributors to this book</primary></indexterm> In particular: <xref linkend="chapter-tour"/> is a fusion of originally separate documents, one by Athelstan, and one by Nora Tansky LeChevalier and Bob LeChevalier; <xref linkend="chapter-phonology"/> and <xref linkend="chapter-morphology"/> were originally written by Bob LeChevalier with contributions by Chuck Barton; <xref linkend="chapter-lujvo"/> was originally written (in much longer form) by Nick Nicholas; the dialogue near the end of <xref linkend="chapter-attitudinals"/> was contributed by Nora Tansky LeChevalier; <xref linkend="chapter-negation"/> and parts of <xref linkend="chapter-quantifiers"/> were originally by Bob LeChevalier; and the YACC grammar in

<xref linkend="chapter-grammars"/> is the work of several hands, but is primarily by Bob LeChevalier and Jeff Taylor. The BNF grammar, which is also in <xref linkend="chapter-grammars"/>, was originally written by me, then rewritten by Clark Nelson, and finally touched up by me again.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>credits for</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>credits for this book</primary></indexterm> The research into natural languages from which parts of <xref linkend="chapter-selbri"/> draw their material was performed by Ivan Derzhanski. LLG acknowledges his kind permission to use the fruits of his research.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>pictures</primary><secondary>credits for</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>credits for pictures</primary></indexterm> The pictures in this book were drawn by Nora Tansky LeChevalier, except for the picture appearing in

<xref linkend="chapter-morphology"/>, which is by Sylvia Rutiser Rissell.


The index was made by Nora Tansky LeChevalier.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>this book</primary><secondary>reviewers of</secondary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>reviewers of this book</primary></indexterm> I would like to thank the following people for their detailed reviews, suggestions, comments, and early detection of my embarrassing errors in Lojban, logic, English, and cross-references: Nick Nicholas, Mark Shoulson, Veijo Vilva, Colin Fine, And Rosta, Jorge Llambias, Iain Alexander, Paulo S. L. M. Barreto, Robert J. Chassell, Gale Cowan, Karen Stein, Ivan Derzhanski, Jim Carter, Irene Gates, Bob LeChevalier, John Parks-Clifford (also known as pc), and Nora Tansky LeChevalier.


Nick Nicholas (NSN) would like to thank the following Lojbanists: Mark Shoulson, Veijo Vilva, Colin Fine, And Rosta, and Iain Alexander for their suggestions and comments; John Cowan, for his extensive comments, his exemplary trailblazing of Lojban grammar, and for solving the <valsi>manskapi</valsi> dilemma for NSN; Jorge Llambias, for his even more extensive comments, and for forcing NSN to think more than he was inclined to; Bob LeChevalier, for his skeptical overview of the issue, his encouragement, and for scouring all Lojban text his computer has been burdened with for lujvo; Nora Tansky LeChevalier, for writing the program converting old rafsi text to new rafsi text, and sparing NSN from embarrassing errors; and Jim Carter, for his dogged persistence in analyzing lujvo algorithmically, which inspired this research, and for first identifying the three lujvo classes.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Brown</primary><secondary>James Cooke</secondary></indexterm> Of course, the entire Loglan Project owes a considerable debt to James Cooke Brown as the language inventor, and also to several earlier contributors to the development of the language. Especially noteworthy are Doug Landauer, Jeff Prothero, Scott Layson, Jeff Taylor, and Bob McIvor. Final responsibility for the remaining errors and infelicities is solely mine.


Informal Bibliography

<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>Loglan</primary></indexterm> <indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>bibliography</primary></indexterm> The founding document for the Loglan Project, of which this book is one of the products, is <citetitle pubwork="book">Loglan 1: A Logical Language</citetitle> by James Cooke Brown (4th ed. 1989, The Loglan Institute, Gainesville, Florida, U.S.A.). The language described therein is not Lojban, but is very close to it and may be considered an ancestral version. It is regrettably necessary to state that nothing in this book has been approved by Dr. Brown, and that the very existence of Lojban is disapproved of by him.


The logic of Lojban, such as it is, owes a good deal to the American philosopher W. v.O. Quine, especially <citetitle pubwork="book">Word and Object</citetitle> (1960, M.I.T. Press). Much of Quine's philosophical writings, especially on observation sentences, reads like a literal translation from Lojban.


The theory of negation expounded in <xref linkend="chapter-negation"/> is derived from a reading of Laurence Horn's work <citetitle pubwork="book">A Natural History of Negation</citetitle>.


Of course, neither Brown nor Quine nor Horn is in any way responsible for the uses or misuses I have made of their works.


<indexterm type="general-imported"><primary>books about Lojban</primary></indexterm> Depending on just when you are reading this book, there may be three other books about Lojban available: a textbook, a Lojban/English dictionary, and a book containing general information about Lojban. You can probably get these books, if they have been published, from the same place where you got this book. In addition, other books not yet foreseen may also exist.


Captions to Pictures

The following examples list the Lojban caption, with a translation, for the picture at the head of each chapter. If a chapter's picture has no caption, (none) is specified instead.


<section>

<link linkend="chapter-about-picture">Chapter 1 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> coi lojban. coi rodo </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> Greetings, O Lojban! Greetings, all-of you </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-tour-picture">Chapter 2 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-phonology-picture">Chapter 3 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> .i .ai .i .ai .o </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> [untranslatable] </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-morphology-picture">Chapter 4 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> jbobliku </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> Lojbanic-blocks </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-selbri-picture">Chapter 5 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-sumti-picture">Chapter 6 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> lei re nanmu cu bevri le re nanmu </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> The-mass-of two men carry the two men Two men (jointly) carry two men (both of them). </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-anaphoric-cmavo-picture">Chapter 7 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> ma drani danfu .i di'e

.i di'u .i dei .i ri .i do'i </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> [What sumti] is-the-correct type-of-answer? The-next-sentence. The-previous-sentence. This-sentence. The-previous-sentence. An-unspecified-utterance. </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-relative-clauses-picture">Chapter 8 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> ko viska re prenu poi bruna la santas. </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> [You!] see two persons who-are brothers-of Santa.

</programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-sumti-tcita-picture">Chapter 9 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-tenses-picture">Chapter 10 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> za'o klama </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> [superfective] come/go Something goes (or comes) for too long. </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-abstractions-picture">Chapter 11 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> le si'o kunti </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> The concept-of emptiness </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-lujvo-picture">Chapter 12 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-attitudinals-picture">Chapter 13 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> .oi ro'i ro'a ro'o </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> [Pain!] [emotional] [social] [physical] </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-connectives-picture">Chapter 14 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-negation-picture">Chapter 15 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> mi na'e lumci le karce </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> I other-than wash the car I didn't wash the car. </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-quantifiers-picture">Chapter 16 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> drata mupli pe'u .djan. </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> another example [please] John Another example, John, please! </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-letterals-picture">Chapter 17 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> zai xanlerfu by. ly. .obu .jy by. .abu ny.

</programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> [Shift] hand-letters l o j b a n "Lojban" in a manual alphabet </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-mekso-picture">Chapter 18 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> no no </programlisting> <programlisting xml:space="preserve"> 0 0 </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-structure-picture">Chapter 19 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-catalogue-picture">Chapter 20 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting> <section>

<link linkend="chapter-grammars-picture">Chapter 21 Caption</link>

<programlisting xml:space="preserve"> (none) </programlisting>

Boring Legalities

Copyright © 1997 by The Logical Language Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this book, either in electronic or in printed form, provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.


Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this book, provided that the modifications are clearly marked as such, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.


Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this book into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation that has been approved by the Logical Language Group, rather than in English.


The contents of <xref linkend="chapter-grammars"/> are in the public domain.


For information, contact: The Logical Language Group, 2904 Beau Lane, Fairfax VA 22031-1303 USA Telephone 703-385-0273. Electronic address: <link xlink:href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</link>World Wide Web: <link xlink:href="http://www.lojban.org">http://www.lojban.org</link>


</chapter>